BAKU: USA reportedly for Armenia’s involvement in Azeri gas project

USA reportedly for Armenia’s involvement in Azeri gas project after return of
land
Ekspress, Baku
7 May 04

The USA has a proposal to Armenia for an “energy corridor” model at
the Karabakh talks, the head of the centre for political innovations
and technology, Mubariz Ahmadoglu, told a news conference yesterday [6
May]. Yerevan equivocally takes Washington’s cautious position at the
peace talks.
“The US government openly backs Europe’s proposals on the use of
economic cooperation principles to settle the conflict. But Yerevan is
dissatisfied with Washington’s approach to this issue,” Ahmadoglu
said.
According to the new “model”, the USA will discuss the possibility of
Armenia’s involvement in the Baku-Erzurum [gas pipeline] project in
exchange for the return of Azerbaijan’s occupied lands.
[Passage omitted: Armenia’s involvement in Baku-Ceyhan pipeline was
discussed in 1994]
According to Ahmadoglu, it is not a coincidence that Steven Mann has
been appointed as US co-chairman of the OSCE Minsk Group. He said that
the new situation after this appointment was not to Armenia’s benefit.
“The Armenians view Steven Mann as an open danger for themselves
because the new co-chairman is aware of Yerevan’s behind-the-scene
games in the talks process,” Ahmadoglu said. He added that Steven Mann
was the author of “energy corridor” model.
But the Baku government is unaware of any model on various energy
corridors for the settlement of the Karabakh conflict. “Ideas of this
kind always appear and it is natural. But we have not got any official
information about this,” the Azerbaijani president’s special
representative on the Karabakh conflict and deputy foreign minister,
Araz Azimov, told the Ekspress newspaper.
According to Baku’s official position, cooperation with Armenia is
ruled out until the return of the lands. “We are ready to discuss any
models of the settlement within this condition, i.e. if our lands are
returned,” Azimov said.

Duma official views Ajaria’s role in regional, religious context

Russian Duma official views Ajaria’s role in regional, religious context
Moskovskiy Komsomolets, Moscow
7 May 04
Commentary by Andrey Kokoshin, chairman of State Duma CIS Affairs
Committee, entitled “Another View” carried by Russian newspaper
Moskovskiy Komsomolets on 7 May
“It is essential to approach the situation in [Georgia’s] Ajaria in a
broader regional and global context.
“Our executive branch of power, the State Duma, always drew to the
attention of [the Georgian capital] Tbilisi that the problem should
not under any circumstances be resolved by the use of military
force. Partly because the Muslim factor plays an immense role there in
Ajaria.
“It borders on Turkey. Currently Turkey is officially a secular state
but recently the influence of radical Islamists has been growing
there. And if force had been used in this situation, the region could
have been badly destabilized and armed radical Islamists might have
appeared in Ajaria.
“Ajaria might have served as a flashpoint for the radicalisation of
Muslims all over Georgia and throughout the South Caucasus. This would
have become a big problem for Russia, our strategic ally Armenia,
fraternal Azerbaijan, and the whole world community.”

Genocide Victims Remembered in Ceremony

PRESS RELEASE
ASSEMBLYMAN STEVE SAMUELIAN’S OFFICE
State Capitol, Sacramento, CA 95814
Contact: Boghos Patatian
Tel: (559) 243.4192
(626) 818.9004 Cell

May 7, 2004
Genocide Victims Remembered in Ceremony
Sacramento–On Monday April 26 Assemblyman Samuelian helped organize a
special ceremony on the floor of the State Assembly to recognize the
victims of the 1915-1923 Armenian Genocide.
Assemblyman Samuelian spoke on the floor about his Assembly Concurrent
Resolution that he co-authored commemorating the victims of the
Armenian Genocide. Samuelian said, “Today we mark a tragic and
horrific period of history. The victims of the Armenian Genocide must
never be forgotten. I will continue to speak out strongly about this
Genocide in order that the world remembers these tragic events.”
Samuelian organized a delegation of Fresno Armenian-American leaders
to travel to Sacramento and recognized those individuals on the
Assembly floor after his comments.
The leaders attending the special ceremony were:
Dr. Janice Emerzian, Dean at Fresno City College
Les Emerzian, Community leader
Mary Mortanian, Author and daughter of Genocide victim
# # #

Jazz picks

The Boston Globe
May 7, 2004, Friday ,THIRD EDITION
JAZZ PICKS
BY SCOTT HELLER
Heads up: The phenomenal singer – and spitfire – Dee Dee Bridgewater
is at Scullers Jazz Club next Thursday and Friday. If you have time
to see one jazz show, make it this. Otherwise: Sergio Mendes and
Brazil 2004 are at Scullers tonight and tomorrow night; on Tuesday
night Julia & Zerounian Ensemble perform songs from Armenia, Russia,
and France. At Ryles Jazz Club tonight at 9:30, it’s singer Marta
Gomez; tomorrow night the Teresa Ines Group is at the Cambridge
venue. Finally, Tuesday at the Zeitgeist Gallery, vocalist/composer
Dominique Eade is part of a women’s jazz event called “Estrojam” at 7
p.m.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

ASBAREZ Online [05-07-2004]

ASBAREZ ONLINE
TOP STORIES
05/07/2004
TO ACCESS PREVIOUS ASBAREZ ONLINE EDITIONS PLEASE VISIT OUR
WEBSITE AT <;HTTP:// 1) Armenia Eligible for Millennium Challenge Account Funding 2) New Hampshire Senators Cosponsor Genocide Resolution 3) Kocharian Leaves for Lebanon Monday 4) Karabagh DM Questions Azerbaijan's Readiness to Start New War 5) Georgia Strengthens Grip on Ajaria 6) President Bush Appoints New Ambassador to Armenia 7) Conference on Armenian Communities of Iran 1) Armenia Eligible for Millennium Challenge Account Funding Secretary Powell Announces List of 16 Countries Invited to Submit Proposals for Multi-Billion Dollar Aid Program WASHINGTON, DC--The State Department announced that Armenia has been chosen to be among a select group of 16 countries eligible for Millennium Challenge Account funding, a new multi-billion dollar US program designed to provide assistance to low-income countries that demonstrate a strong commitment toward good governance and economic growth and reform, reported the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA.) "We welcome the State Department's decision to include Armenia in the first tier of countries to participate in the MCA," said ANCA Chairman Ken Hachikian. "The funds will create important opportunities for strengthening the Armenian economy and helping the Armenian people overcome the ongoing, multi-billion dollar impact of the dual Turkish and Azerbaijani blockades. We look forward to working with Armenian Government officials and the Millennium Challenge Corporation to assist in the funding process ahead." The complete list of 16 countries eligible to apply for MCA funds includes: Armenia, Benin, Bolivia, Cape Verde, Georgia, Ghana, Honduras, Lesotho, Madagascar, Mali, Mongolia, Mozambique, Nicaragua, Senegal, Sri Lanka, and Vanuatu. President Bush first announced his intent to create the MCA in March, 2002. The program is based on the premise that economic development succeeds best where it is linked to free market economic and democratic principles and policies. Eligibility under this program, which is only open to selected low-income countries, is conditioned on sound policy performance and accountability by recipient nations. This performance in measured by sixteen quantifiable criteria in the areas of ruling justly, investing in people, and economic freedom. Overall funding for MCA will be $1 billion for Fiscal Year 2004, and is expected to increase to $5 billion by Fiscal Year 2006. Although there are no guaranties that its grant proposals will be funded, Armenia's annual share from this new foreign aid program could be as much as $75 million a year. Secretary of State Colin Powell, who serves as chairman of the Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC), developed to oversee the implementation of the Millenium Challenge Account funds, stated, "This is a historic day for the Millennium Challenge Corporation. The President's vision has come to pass, and today's decision by the Board of Directors is a major step in implementing the vision of the MCC." An ANCA study prepared in September of 2003 showed that Armenia was well-positioned to receive MCA funding based on the 16 criteria set out by the MCC. The study was distributed widely to Members of Congress and the Administration as well as to representatives of the Armenian Government. In the months that followed, the ANCA tracked Congressional hearings dealing with MCA, where Members of Congress including Rep. Adam Schiff (D-CA), Brad Sherman (D-CA) and Joseph Crowley (D-NY), spoke in support of Armenia's participation in the program and questioned early assertions that Armenia may not receive first tier funding. Upon learning of the MCC announcement, Rep. Schiff stated, "I am delighted to see that Armenia is included in the first group of nations eligible to receive funding under the Millennium Challenge Account. As a struggling democracy that is economically isolated by an injurious blockade, Armenia is a prime candidate for MCA assistance. This is welcome news for Armenia and a good judgment by the MCA Board and State Department." MCA eligibility was among a series of topics brought up in high level meetings between Armenian Government officials and an ANCA delegation including Chairman Ken Hachikian, held in conjunction with an Armenian Foreign Ministry Armenian Advocacy conference, held in Yerevan on May 3 and 4. The ANCA provided specific recommendations about the development of grant submissions to the MCA to ensure that Armenia, if selected, would receive a significant share of the first year MCA awards. According to the MCA Website (<;), eligible countries will work with the MCC to develop a compact proposal for "achieving sustainable economic growth and poverty reduction." Successful proposals would be designed to: --Engage a broad array of its society in coming up with its development priorities; --Identify the measurable objectives that it wants to achieve; --Include a plan for achieving those objectives with targets to assess progress; --Develop transparent mechanisms to measure and evaluate whether targets are being met and to ensure financial accountability; and --Provide a plan for sustaining progress after the MCA compact ends. The extent to which a country's proposal meets the above requirements will help determine whether and how much the MCC will invest in the country. 2) New Hampshire Senators Cosponsor Genocide Resolution -- Support for S.Res.164 Reaches 39 in the Senate WASHINGTON, DC--New Hampshire Senators Judd Gregg and John Sununu agreed to cosponsor the Genocide Resolution, S.Res.164, bringing the total number of cosponsors to thirty-nine, reported the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA). Both senators heard regularly from their New Hampshire constituents on this matter over the past several months, reflecting the growing activism of the Armenian American community in northern New England. Rhode Island Senator Lincoln Chafee is the only New England area Senator yet to cosponsor the legislation. Most recently, a New Hampshire delegation of activists including Mike Manoian, Harry Alexanian, and Jeannette John spoke with representatives of both Senators, at meetings coinciding with the ANCA Armenian Genocide Observance on Capitol Hill, held on April 28. Dr. Peter Balakian, whose recently published book, "The Burning Tigris" extensively documents US humanitarian response to the Armenian Genocide, detailed the importance of supporting Genocide prevention legislation during the meeting with Sen. Gregg's office. "We join with the Armenian community of New Hampshire in welcoming the support of Senators Gregg and Sununu for the Genocide Resolution" said ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian. "With the 89th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide commemorated just a few weeks ago, and the prospect of yet another genocide developing in the Sudan as we speak, support for legislation like S.Res.164 has never been more vital. We must, as a nation, reaffirm our commitment to the aims of the Genocide Convention and ensure that the lessons of past genocides are applied in the prevention of future crimes against humanity." A two-term Member of the Senate, Sen. Gregg is Chairman of the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee and serves on the Appropriations and Budget Committees. Sen. John Sununu, now in his first term, serves on the Foreign Relations, Banking, Governmental Affairs and Joint Economic committees. The Genocide resolution was introduced in the Senate in June, 2003 by Senators John Ensign (R-NV) and Jon Corzine (D-NJ). Its companion House measure, H.Res.193, led by Representatives George Radanovich (R-CA), Adam Schiff (D-CA), and Congressional Armenian Caucus Co-Chairs Frank Pallone (D-NJ) and Joe Knollenberg (R-MI), was adopted unanimously by the House Judiciary Committee last May and has 111 cosponsors. The resolution cites the importance of remembering past crimes against humanity, including the Armenian Genocide, Holocaust, Cambodian and Rwandan genocides, in an effort to stop future atrocities. Support for the measure has been widespread, with a diverse coalition of over 100 ethnic, religious, civil and human rights organizations calling for its passage, including American Values, National Organization of Women, Sons of Italy, NAACP, Union of Orthodox Rabbis, and the National Council of La Raza. 3) Kocharian Leaves for Lebanon Monday YEREVAN (Armenpress)--President Robert Kocharian will visit Lebanon on May 10 at the invitation of Lebanese president Emile Lahoud. Kocharian is set to meet with Prime Minister Rafik Hariri, parliament Chairman Nabi Berri, and deputy Prime Minister Issam Fares as well. He will hold meetings with head of the Great See of Cilicia Catholicos Aram I, Armenian Catholic Church Catholicos-Patriarch Nerses Tarmuni, leader of the Armenian Evangelical Church in the Middle East Mkrtich Karagyozian, along with representatives of the local Armenian community. Aside from official business, Kocharian will visit local historical sights and monuments. 4) Karabagh DM Questions Azerbaijan's Readiness to Start New War STEPANAKERT (Combined Sources)--Karabagh's defense minister Major General Seiran Ohanian, said Thursday that there have not been considerable changes on the Armenian-Azeri border in the last ten years since the establishment of the 1994 cease-fire. During a meeting with reporters, the minister noted that reports disseminated by Azeri mass media claiming Azeri forces have penetrated Karabagh's positions are explicit lies. "Such propaganda naturally aims to make psychological attacks and terrorize the peaceful population to create a feeling of fright and hopelessness, but they are doomed to fail," he said. Answering questions on the possibility of war resuming again, Ohanian said that technically, the war could restart any time, and stressed the need to always be prepared. "Generally, resumption of war is possible at any time and we should be ready for that. But I don't think Azerbaijan is ready today to resume military actions especially since a successful balance of power has been maintained." Commenting on the status of Karabagh's army, the defense minister said the army is not only ready defensively, but also to ready to counterattack. "In recent years we have worked hard to strengthen ties between the people and the army; when society and the army are united, they are undefeatable." 5) Georgia Strengthens Grip on Ajaria BATUMI (AP)--The legislature in Georgia's Ajaria province has abolished the post held by the former leader of the region, strengthening the central government's control, officials said Friday. The unanimous decision late Thursday came after Aslan Abashidze bowed to pressure to step down and flew to Moscow, ending a struggle with Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili for control over Ajaria that sparked fears of a new war in Georgia. Abashidze, who led Ajaria for 13 years, had been the speaker of its parliament but later became its executive leader, a post created for him by the legislature in the Black Sea region. "There was a regime here that had far more rights than an autonomous region should have," Saakashvili said late Thursday, referring to Ajaria's autonomous status within Georgia. "Ajaria was separate from Georgia. It had ... its own armed forces, its own police structure. But those times are over." After Abashidze left following two days of public protests, Saakashvili flew triumphantly to the Ajarian capital of Batumi and called it a step toward restoring Georgia's unity. "While I am the president of Georgia, I will not allow the existence of several armed forces and ministries of security and internal affairs on the country's territory," he said. The comment was more provocative than a statement he had made earlier in the day, when he pledged to try to bring the separatist regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia back into the fold through negotiations. The two regions broke away from central government control in wars in the early 1990s. Saakashvili has moved quickly to assert authority over Ajaria and pledged that legislative elections would be held around mid-June. He said he would remain in Batumi for five days, helping to set up and lead a temporary Council to govern the region until the elections. He said a Batumi native, high-level Georgian railroad official Levan Vashalomidze, would lead the council. Despite the efforts to maintain order, fights broke out outside Abashidze's former residence Friday when former guards of the regional strongman came to demand two months' salary and they were confronted by anti-Abashidze protesters. Georgian Interior Ministry troops fired into the air to break up the scuffles, and Deputy Security Minister Gigi Ugulava said authorities would pay "those who deserve it." Saakashvili has made restoring Georgia's unity a major goal since his landslide election in January, which came after he led protests that prompted the resignation of his predecessor, Eduard Shevardnadze, in November. Unlike Abkhazia and South Ossetia, Ajaria did not espouse separatism. But Abashidze had defied the central government for years, withholding revenues from Tbilisi's coffers and firmly suppressing opposition political groups. Ajaria had its own heavily armed Interior Ministry forces and Kalashnikov-toting men in civilian dress prowled Batumi's streets. 6) President Bush Appoints New Ambassador to Armenia WASHINGTON (Armenpress)--President George W. Bush announced Thursday his nomination of John Marshall Evans of Virginia as the new US Ambassador to the Republic of Armenia. A career member of the Senior Foreign Service and a Yale University graduate, Evans currently serves as Director of the State Department's Office of Russian Affairs. He previously served as Director of the Office of Analysis for Russia and Eurasia in the Bureau of Intelligence and Research. 7) Conference on Armenian Communities of Iran UCLA--The fourteenth in the UCLA International Conference series on Historic Armenian Cities and Provinces will feature the colorful history and culture of the Armenian communities of Iran from ancient to modern times. The conference, to be held in Glendale and on the UCLA campus from Friday evening to Sunday afternoon, May 14-16, will bring together scholars from Armenia, Cyprus, Germany, Great Britain, Iran, Italy, and various parts of the United States. The conference is organized by Professor Richard G. Hovannisian, holder of the Armenian Educational Foundation Chair in Modern Armenian History at UCLA, and is co-sponsored by the Armenian Society (Iranahay Miutiun) of Los Angeles and the UCLA International Institute, GE von Grunebaum Center for Near Eastern Studies, and the Center for European and Russian Studies. The opening session in Armenian will be held on Friday evening, May 14, from 7:30 to 10:00, in the Glendale Presbyterian Church at the corner of Louise and Harvard Streets in Glendale and will include illustrated lectures by Armen Hakhnazarian (Germany and Armenia) on Saint Stepanos and Dzordzor monasteries; Onnik Hairapetian (Glendale and Mashdotz Colleges) on the Armenians of the Salmast region; and Gohar Avagian (Historical Archives, Armenia), on the life and works of Archbishop Melik-Tangian of Tabriz. The Saturday sessions on May 15 from 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. will be held on the UCLA campus, in Court of Sciences 50 (Young Hall), and will be conducted in English. The presentations will focus on the political, cultural and literary, economic, and social history of the Armenians of Iran or Persia. Speakers include Richard Hovannisian on the Iranian Armenian community; A.E. Redgate (Newcastle, England), on Iran and Vaspurakan; Peter Cowe (UCLA) on Tabriz under the Il-Khans; Hovann Simonian (USC) on Maku in the 15th century; Thomas Sinclair University of Cyprus) on the silk trade; Gabriella Uluhogian (Bologna University, Italy), on socio-political life in the 17th-19th centuries; Vazken Ghougassian (Eastern Prelacy, New York), on Armenian rural settlements in Iran, 17th-19th centuries; Rubina Peroomian (UCLA), on Iran and the Armenian Liberation Movement; Houri Berberian (California State University, Long Beach), on Armenian Identity during the Persian Constitutional Revolution; Rose Marie Cohen (Los Angeles), on the Massacres of Khoi during World War I; Gayane Hagopian (UCLA) on Raffi's Stories about Iranian Armenians; Anahid Keshishian (UCLA), on Hakob Karapents; Bert Vaux (University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee), on the Iranian Armenian Dialect. The Sunday afternoon sessions on May 16 from 1:30 to 5:30 will be in Armenian and in English with presentations by Armen Ter Stepanyan (Matenadaran, Armenia), on Bibliogrpahic Sources on the Persian Armenians; Armen Hakhnazarian (Germany and Armenia), on the Gharadagh Armenian communities; Artsvi Bskhchinyan (Armenia), on Armenians in Iranian Theater and Cinema; Samvel Stepanian (Glendale), on Economic Life in 19th-20th centuries; Aida Avanessian (Tehran, Iran), on the Armenian Community of Tehran; and Claudia Mardirossian (UCLA), and Anny Bakalian (New York University), on Integration of Armenian Iranians in California. As in all previous conferences, a photographic exhibit will be mounted by Richard and Anne Elizabeth Elbrecht of Davis, California. All proceedings are open to the public at no charge. Parking on the UCLA campus is in Parking Structure 2, entrance from Hilgard Avenue at Westholme. The conference program may be viewed at and Professor Hovannisian may be contacted by e-mail at [email protected]. All subscription inquiries and changes must be made through the proper carrier and not Asbarez Online. ASBAREZ ONLINE does not transmit address changes and subscription requests. (c) 2004 ASBAREZ ONLINE. All Rights Reserved. ASBAREZ provides this news service to ARMENIAN NEWS NETWORK members for academic research or personal use only and may not be reproduced in or through mass media outlets.

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Eastern Prelacy: Crossroads E-Newsletter 05/07/04

PRESS RELEASE
Eastern Prelacy of the Armenian Apostolic Church of America
138 East 39th Street
New York, NY 10016
Tel: 212-689-7810
Fax: 212-689-7168
e-mail: [email protected]
Website:
Contact: Iris Papazian
CROSSROADS E-NEWSLETTER: May 7, 2004
THE PASSING OF ARCHBISHOP ZAREH AZNAVOURIAN
His Holiness Aram I, Catholicos of the Great House of Cilicia, and His
Eminence Archbishop Oshagan Choloyan, Prelate, the Religious and Executive
Councils of the Eastern Prelacy of the Armenian Apostolic Church of America,
announce with deepest sadness the passing of His Eminence Archbishop Zareh
Aznavourian, on Friday, April 30, 2004, in Antelias, Lebanon. His Eminence
was 57 years old.
Archbishop Zareh faithfully served the Armenian Apostolic Church as an
ordained celibate priest for 38 years, most of which was spent at the
Catholicosate of the Holy See of Cilicia in Antelias, Lebanon, except for
two years in Rome where he pursued higher education and three years as the
Prelate of Cyprus.
Archbishop Zareh was an eminent teacher at the Cilician See’s
Theological Seminary and director of the Holy See’s Christian Education
Department. He was a noted composer of both religious and secular music, a
gifted scholar, a Biblical translator, and an author of textbooks and
commentaries. He was considered to be one of the most noted Biblical
scholars within the Armenian Church.
Many of our faithful came to know, love and respect him during the
various times he was in the United States for medical treatment. He lectured
last year during the Lenten Lectures series and he conducted the sacraments
and preached in some of our parishes. His death is a great loss for the
Armenian Church.
The Extreme Unction took place during a solemn Divine Liturgy service at
the Cathedral of St. Gregory the Illuminator in Antelias, on Monday, May 3.
Interment followed in the Zarehian Mausoleum of the Holy See of Cilicia.
Archbishop Oshagan traveled to Lebanon to participate in the services.
PRELATE WILL VISIT WAUKEGAN THIS WEEKEND
Upon his return from Lebanon, Archbishop Oshagan will immediately travel
to St. Paul Church of Waukegan, Illinois, where he will join the parish
members in welcoming their new priest, Rev. Fr. Arsen Kassabian at a banquet
Saturday evening. The parish will also bid a fond farewell to Rev. Fr.
Arshag Daghlian who has been serving the community as an outreach priest for
nearly fifteen years.
On Sunday Oshagan Srpazan will officiate at the Divine Liturgy and also
preside over the ordination of deacons, sub-deacons, and acolytes.
NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVE ASSEMBLY
WILL CONVENE IN PHILADELPHIA
The National Representative Assembly (NRA) of the Eastern Prelacy will
convene in Philadelphia, May 19 through 21, during which time the clergy and
lay delegates will deliberate on current issues as well as long-range
planning for the future. The host church is St. Gregory the Illuminator, one
of the Eastern Prelacy’s largest and most vibrant parishes.
The NRA is the highest authority of the Armenian Apostolic Church of
America, and is charged with the task of supervising the ecclesiastical and
administrative bodies of the Eastern Prelacy. The first session will begin
Wednesday afternoon, May 19 and continue through Friday, May 21. The NRA
will conclude with a closing banquet Friday evening.
The Keynote Address will be delivered by Professor Vigen Guroian, who
will speak about The Armenian Christian Family Under Fire. Dr. Guroian is
professor of theology and ethics at Loyola College, Baltimore, Maryland.
Various coveted awards will be presented including: Woman of the Year,
to Mrs. Alice Sachaklian and the Spirit of Armenia award to Aram Hamparian.
K. Yervant Terzian will receive the Knight of Cilicia insignia issued by His
Holiness Aram I, Catholicos of the Great House of Cilicia.
For more details visit the Prelacy web-site:
PRELACY LADIES GUILD MOTHERS DAY
LUNCHEON ATTRACTS MANY
Once again the annual Mothers Day luncheon sponsored by the Prelacy
Ladies Guild (PLG) attracted an over-flow attendance from the tri-state area
and beyond at the St. Regis in midtown Manhattan.
In a surprise announcement the current PLG members were honored rather
than one individual as the Mother of the Year. V. Rev. Fr. Anoushavan
Tanielian, Vicar of the Prelacy, represented the Prelate, Archbishop
Oshagan, who was in Lebanon for the funeral of his spiritual brother,
Archbishop Zareh. Hayr Anoushavan explained how it was the wish of Srpazan
that the current members of the PLG be honored this year on the occasion of
the 30th anniversary of the Guild. In his message printed in the special
30th anniversary program booklet, His Eminence said: “This year’s luncheon
has special significance because it also marks the 30th anniversary of the
Prelacy Ladies Guild. It can be said that the Prelacy Ladies Guild has
fulfilled the duties of a mother for the Prelacy. For the past three decades
these dedicated and loving women have generously given their time,
resources, and talents to tend to the needs of the Prelacy. Just like a
loving mother, they have done this without any expectations of glory and
thanks. They have done it simply because of love.”
PRELACY EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
WILL DELIVER PAPER AT UCLA
Dr. Vazken Ghougassian, the Executive Director of the Prelacy, will be
traveling to California on Wednesday, May 12, where he will participate in
the UCLA international conference series on historic Armenian cities and
provinces. The conference will concentrate on the history and culture of the
Armenian communities of Iran from ancient to modern times. The three-day
conference will bring together an impressive gathering of scholars and
specialists.
Dr. Ghougassian, a graduate of Columbia University, will speak about
Armenian Rural Settlements in Central Iran, 17th to 19th Centuries. He is
the author of The Emergence of the Armenian Diocese of New Julfa in the 17th
Century, published by Scholars Press.
The conference is organized by Professor Richard G. Hovannisian, holder
of the Armenian Educational Foundation Chair in Modern Armenian History at
UCLA, and is co-sponsored by the Armenian Society (Iranahay Miutiun) of Los
Angeles and the UCLA International Institute, G.E. von Grunebaum Center for
Near Eastern Studies, and the Center for European and Russian Studies.
The conference program may be viewed at
DATEV SUMMER PROGRAM
BRINGS YOUTH TOGETHER
The annual summer program of the St. Gregory of Datev Institute brings
together junior and senior high school age students in one of the best youth
programs available. The Datev Summer Program will take place June 27 to July
4, at the St. Mary of Providence Center, Elverson, Pennsylvania. For
registration and information visit the Prelacy website at
and also read all the comments from
Datevatzies who have attended the program.
The Datev Institute is organized and sponsored by the Armenian Religious
Education Council (AREC) as part of the youth programs of the Eastern
Prelacy.
It has been a life-changing experience for many who have attended in the
past.
THIS SUNDAY MARKS APPARITION OF THE HOLY CROSS
According to the liturgical calendar of the Armenian Church this Sunday,
May 9, the Apparition of the Holy Cross (Yerevman Sourp Khachi). It is the
fifth Sunday of Hinounk and commemorates the apparition of the cross in
Jerusalem.
In the year 351, the sign of the cross was seen in the sky in Jerusalem,
stretching from Golgotha to the Mount of Olives. It remained for hours and
all the people of Jerusalem viewed it as it overshadowed the sun.
Awe-stricken at this miraculous sight, the faithful led by the clergy rushed
to church to offer their thanks to God. Patriarch Giuregh in a letter
addressed to Constantine of Byzantium, related this miraculous event and
advised him to remain firm in his faith. Only the Armenian and Greek
Churches observe the Feast of the Apparition of the Cross. The Greeks
celebrate it always on May 7 while the Armenians celebrate it on the fifth
Sunday of Easter (fourth Sunday after Easter). Just as the people of
Jerusalem did centuries ago, it has become a custom for people to go to
church on this feast day and glorify God.
THIS SUNDAY IS MOTHERS DAY
This Sunday is also Mothers Day. It is a day to honor our mothers and to
praise motherhood, and to remember those mothers who have passed on to the
eternal kingdom of God.
Many women have done excellently, but you surpass them all. (Proverbs 31:29)

www.armenianprelacy.org
www.uclaarmenian.org
www.armenianprelacy.org/datev.htm

Upheaval in Ajaria may ease trade concerns in Armenia

Welcomed Change: Upheaval in Ajaria may ease trade concerns in Armenia
By Julia Hakobyan
ArmeniaNow.com reporter
May 7, 2004
The departure of Aslan Abashidze from the Georgia autonomous region of
Ajaria on Wednesday, may mean relations between Armenia and its neighbor can
proceed more smoothly than recent conflict in Ajaria has allowed.
“Ajarian Lion” left.
Abashidze fled for Moscow, under threats from Georgian president Mikhail
Saakasvili that military force would be used if necessary to achieve a
settlement between Georgia’s capital, Tbilisi, and the troubled region.
Saakashvili went to the Ajaria port city of Batumi late Wednesday night
where he proclaimed that “Ajaria is free” and that “its dictator left”.
Tensions between the region and Georgia proper have been strained since
Saakashvili was elected to office in January, following the overthrow of the
government of Georgian president Eduard Shevardnadze.
Following a weekend meeting with President Robert Kocharyan in Yerevan in
early March, a Saakashvili motorcade was fired upon as the Georgian
president attempted to enter Ajaria.
In retaliation, the Georgian president imposed an embargo on Ajaria. The
sanction lasted only two days, but, because its main city, Batumi, is a
Black Sea port, the threat to restricted trade was felt severely in Armenia.
About 90 percent of Armenia’s imports and exports are dependent on Georgia’s
ports, the nearest of which is Batumi. More than 1,000 freight cars of food
and fuel per month enter Armenia, having originated in Batumi.
(Due to closed borders with Turkey and Azerbaijan, Armenia’s only waterway
outlet, except via distant Iran, is through Georgia.)
Abashidze, 66, has been the strong arm of Ajaria since 1991 and, in 1995,
his Georgian Revival Union became the second largest political party in
Georgia’s National Assembly.
The recent clashes with Saakashvili reached the boiling point last month,
when two bridges connecting Georgia and Ajaria over the Choloki River were
blown up on Abashidze’s orders.
Some 300,000 residents make up Ajaria, including about 11,000 Armenians,
most of whom live in Batumi. Earlier this week masses took to the streets to
demand Abashidze’s removal, a condition that was achieved with help from his
friend, National Security Council of Russia’s Igor Ivanov, who gave the
leader sanctuary in Moscow.
Abashidze’s departure was welcomed by official Yerevan, which repeatedly had
been calling sides for a dialog.
“Armenia welcomes the consistent and decisive policy of the Georgian
authorities that has helped to overcome that serious obstacle,” said Hamlet
Gasparyan, spokesman for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Armenia. “The
denouement of this problem is another important step on the way of
establishing stability and peace in Georgia and thus on the entire South
Caucasus.”
Stepan Safaryan, an analyst at the Armenian Center for National and
International studies said that the outcome of the Georgia-Ajaria
confrontation was predictable.
Saakashvili after his third victory.
“Some people expected Saakashvili to start ‘ Georgia’s unification’ with its
hottest spot, Abkhazia,” the analyst said. “However he began with Ajaria and
will apparently use the ‘Ajaria model’ for bridging relations with Abkhazia
and South Osetia. Besides, the leadership of those regions might realize now
that in case of their confrontation they probably will follow Abashidze’s
fate.”
In Ajaria, the Armenian community has been divided over the region’s
political conflict – some siding with Abashidze and some with Saakashvili.
“I accept as very normal what happened, because time goes on and the new and
young generation come to change the old,” 73-year old Batumi resident Gevorg
Khachatryan told ArmeniaNow. “I can not say anything negative concerning
Abashidze’s regime. Besides, the situation in Ajaria was more calm than in
other Georigian regions.”
Georgian Armenian Arthur Ohanisyan, a reporter for Ajaria TV, left his
position to join demonstrators who opposed Abashidze.
“We are tired of seeing how Ajaria TV only praises Abashidze,” he said.
“That was the reason why we couldn’t continue working there. Our other
colleagues followed our example and are leaving the company one after
another.”
In Tbilisi yesterday (May 6), the Georgian Parliament adopted a decree
according to which the President of Georgia was authorized to cancel the
current Ajaria Parliament. A special governmental commission was set up
chaired by Saakashvili to prepare new elections of the Ajaria Parliament
which would be held within five to six weeks.
The Armenian and foreign analysts are calling the end of the standoff
between Tbilisi and Batumi “the third bloodless victory of Saakashvili” – a
reference to the resignation of Shevardnadze, and to Saakashvilis’s
election.
(ArmeniaNow reporter Suren Deheryan contributed to this report from
Tbilisi.)

Welcome Back “Aghun”

Welcome Back “Aghun”: Honored actress comes home to revive most popular role
May 7, 2004
By Gayane Abrahamyan
ArmeniaNow arts reporter
After a 15-year absence from Yerevan stage, People’ s Artist of
Armenia Violet Gevorgyan returned last week to her signature role as
Aghun in Hrant Matevosyan’s “Our Corner of the Big World”. Fifteen
years later the actress on her own stage, in her own country.
Since the play was first staged in 1980, Gevorgyan has played the role some
700 times. Fifteen years from her last performance here, she says she hasn’t
forgotten a word or a gesture.
Theater critic and arts professor Henric Hovhannisyan once said Gevorgyan’s
performance “brought such a star down from the sky that this astounded
critic hasn’t and will never see.”
On the stage of the Theater of Young Audience she again brought down that
star this time even brighter and more colorful, welcomed by rousing
applause.
“I am extremely touched; I’m so touched that it’s difficult to play. It’s a
cruel challenge to be away for so many years from your own stage, your own
country, your own audience,” Gevorgyan said.
Gevorgyan gave three nights of performance before returning to her home in
the United States. She moved there in 1990, amid various speculations over
why she left Armenia.
Actor Levon Tukhikyan said the honored actress “simply escaped from here
because she was terribly insulted, they wouldn’t give her any roles because
of human envy.”
The 60-year old actress neither clarified that bitter page of her life then
nor now.
“I left to return, and understand how much I love this soil and water,” she
said.
After starting her career at age 24, Gevorgyan played more than 20 roles in
the Hrachya Ghaplanyan Drama Theater. Her first starring spot was the lead
in “The Diary of Anne Frank”. But it was her bittersweet character Aghun
with whom Gevorgyan would become most identified.
“Violet appeared like a bright star and kept on amazing,” said People’s
Artist Sos Sargsyan. The actor says he’s seen many of Gevorgyan’s
performances as Aghun “and I can say sincerely that intonations of Violet’s
voice are still in my head.”
Violet Gevorgyan and the brother of Hrant Matevosyan, Hrachya Matevosyan.
The actress was invited by the Tekeyan Cultural Union and the performance
was staged in Tekeyan Company headed by State Prize Winner of Republic of
Armenia Artashes Hovhannisyan. After Violet Gevorgyan leaves her role will
be taken over by actress Hasmik Aslanyan.
Aslanyan says it’s hard to play a role in which the audience has already
identified Gevorgyan as her hero Aghun.
“I know that when watching me play I shall always be compared with the
perfect performances of Violet,” says Aslanyan.
Director Artashes Hovhannisyan recalls the 1980s with nostalgia, when
everyone was speaking about the “Autumn Sun” (as the performance is known)
and today he confesses that he was very concerned about the rebirth of the
performance.
“I’m not exaggerating but I’ve spent several sleepless nights thinking how
it will be accepted today after the stunning success it had once,” says
Hovhannisyan.
According to theatre critic Varsik Grigoryan the returning of “Autumn Sun”
and Violet Gevorgyan proves that high art has a mysterious power of rebirth.
“I have seen many actors but I haven’t seen such performing,” Grigoryan
says. “My words are not enough to express how skilled she is.”

Margara village would be first to enjoy open border

Life on the Outskirts: Margara village would be first to enjoy open border
May 7, 2004
By Gayane Lazarian
ArmeniaNow reporter
Along a 15-kilometer stretch of the Armavir region, a barbed wire fence and
the Araks river separates Armenia from Turkey, with the village of Margara
the last spot on the Armenian side.
Villagers think the village will profit if the border with Tukey is opened.
“See, that is the bridge and that is a Turkish soldier,” says Deputy Head of
Margara village Gharib Tadevosyan, pointing to a frontier guard post.
He explains that the village Alijan, which can be seen over there, was once
Armenian.
People of Margara grow up accustomed to military-guarded borders. Villagers
have friendly relations with soldiers. The 15 th station of frontier troops
of the Russian Federation is based in Margara.
Until 1994 non-residents of Margara, could enter the village only with
special permits and passes.
“Our girls couldn’t get married, because people who were not residents of
the village couldn’t come to see them,” villager Samvel Mirzoyan says. “For
that reason almost everyone in the village are in-law relatives to each
other.”
There are 400 households and 1100 residents in Margara. This year 24 births
have been registered.
“We love our village very much but the life is very passive here. It’s true,
we are people who keep the border but there is nothing interesting here,”
says Tadevosyan.
There is a cultural center in the village, but the roof is almost gone.
There is no kindergarten. There is a school for 240 students, but it has no
gym. Employees of the village government offices have not received salaries
for three years.
Gharib says when lands were distributed, families got 800 square meters
each. He complains that it isn’t enough, compared to what neighboring
villages got. Besides, the land itself is not so rich.
Villager Vachagan Asatryan moved to Margara from Spitak after the earthquake
of 1988.
He says Margara soil is too salty.
“People hardly work the land as the soil isn’t fertile,” Asatryan says.
“During Soviet times people used to add acid to the soil for increasing its
fertility. But now, who cares?”
Mirzoyan says the land has never been fertile, but that the village was
settled because of the river.
“Our grandfathers decided to go along the Araks and settle there. Fishery
was their primary occupation. They were living at the expense of fishing.
But now who will allow us to fish in the Araks?”
Villagers’ privatized lands are located behind the barbed wires within the
border. They can enter their own lands only with special permits.
“They open the fence in the morning at 9 o’clock and in the evening at 7 o’
clock they drive us out. We can’t fully use our day. We can’t work at
nights. But in summer our turn to get water often comes at night,” says
Mirzoyan, who argues that the river should be more accessible.
The village itself is in a depression created by a flood that in 1968
changed the center of the village.
May is always a dangerous month for Margara, when spring floods threaten.
Near the border bridge is a half-built construction. Tadevosyan says it was
supposed to have been a tourist camp.
“They say when Breznev was in power they wanted to open the bridge but
probably they didn’t come to agreement and left the works incomplete,” he
says.
Over the past year there have been official speculation on opening the
border with Turkey. Margara would be the first Armenian territory affected
by such a situation. Villagers are in favor of seeing it happen.
“We will be the first to make use of it,” Tadevosyan says. “If they open the
border the village will gain. One of the reasons is that there will be a lot
of new things to do. The trade will be developed, prices for the lands here
will increase and roads will be at last be reconstructed.”
Deputy head of Margara village Gharib Tadevosyan.
But he is interrupted by Mirzoyan who says villagers aren’t prepared for the
traffic of a border town. They don’t know how to manage business, run
restaurants, hotels, he argues.
And he tells of the history of other traffic through Margara.
“People used to pass the border and join Kurdish troops in the struggle
against the Turks. We heard it from our grandfathers,” he says. “Those who
were going to escape, told those who stayed in the village, that as soon as
they successfully reach the place they will light fire on the slopes of
Masis and smoke of the fire would mean they have reached the place without
problems. And it happened the way they told.”
Samvel says a prosperous life in the village would prove to the outer world
that Armenia is in good conditions.
“The sound of our school bell can be heard in Turkey. If our lights are
switched off at night our neighbors can clearly see. If the village lives
good it will be good for everyone. After all Margara, in some measure, is a
lock for the country. ”
In Margara storks live in concord with villagers and soldiers. As villagers
say, these birds in these latter days don’t leave the village even in
winters. They are like frontier guards, who are simple dressed in white.

Family faces displacement over residency status

Hometown Dispute: Family faces displacement over residency status
May 7, 2004
By Julia Hakobyan
ArmeniaNow reporter
Levon Galstyan’s family are not refugees of war, but of natural
disaster. They are Armenians who escaped Gyumri on December 9, 1988,
two days after earthquake ruined their home. The “Corncob”.
They came to Yerevan, where they moved into a landmark of the capital, the
“Corncob” building, officially known as Yerevan Youth Palace.
As aggressions intensified between Azerbaijan and Armenia over Karabakh,
hundreds of Armenians from Azerbaijan also moved into the hostel.
These 15 years later, the building, home for all the time to the Galystans
as well as the refugees, has been privatized. Twenty-nine refugee families
were paid between $5,000 and $10,000 to move out.
The Galstyans have gotten nothing. The three-member family says it faces
being homeless, unless an arbitration court finds them qualified to be paid
a displacement allotment relevant to real estate prices in Yerevan.
Authorities say the Galstyans must move back to Gyumri and apply for housing
there.
“We lived in Yerevan for 15 years and we have jobs here,” Levon Galstyan
says. “We will have no job and no home in Gyumri. All that we want is
compensation. It is not human to compensate all residents except us. If we
don’t have the refugee status it does not mean that we have to end up in the
street.”
The director of insolvency issues for the Youth Palace, Levon Hovanisyan,
says the Galstyans needn’t worry about being homeless, but should move back
to Gyumri, where they would be eligible for housing under earthquake relief
assistance programs.
“No one is going to move them out to the street. It is not that they have no
place to go. The problem is that they do not want to leave Yerevan,”
Hovanisyan says. “Other families from Gyumri agreed to take certificates and
leave. There is no law saying that if a person has lived in some city for
several years and has a job in that city he has the rights to have residency
pretensions.”
Levon, 43, his sister Susanna, 50, and their 83-year old mother lived in No.
310 of the Youth Palace. On weekends Levon, a musician by education, sells
the paintings of his brother who lives in Gyumri. Susanna works in a
library.
“My job in Yerevan feeds my family and the family of my brother,” Levon
says. “How am I am supposed to maintain them if I lose this work?”
The Galstyans are again facing the problem of moving out.
Levon and his mother have residency permits form Gyumri. Susanna, however,
has a stamp in her passport showing that her residence is the 20-square
meter flat in the Youth Palace. Hovanisyan questions how she got the stamp
for the property, which had belonged to the Ministry of Youth and Culture.
The Galstyans argue that their registration in Gyumri would provide only
$3,000 for housing.
“We can not buy a house for $3000 neither in Yerevan nor in Gyumri,” Levon
says. (In Yerevan one room apartments sell for an average of $7,000).
“Besides I have already checked that there are more than 2,000 families in
Gyumri, having acquired a housing certificate, cannot find an appropriate
house, . My brother, too, got the certificate after the earthquake but he
could not find a house and lives now in domik (temporary housing) in
Gyumri.”
The Galstyans’ appeal is currently being heard in court. Levon says the
family is not optimistic of a settlement in its favor.
“The family was suggested to take an apartment for four months free of
charge until they find the house by their certificate, but they refuse” says
Karine Petrosyan, the arbitration judge.
The family’s property is stored in the corridor of the hotel while they try
to maintain living in their unit.
The building, which includes a 500-bed hotel, a 1,200-seat concert hall,
gymnasiums and recording studios, was sold in January for about $740,000 to
Avantgarde Motor Company, distributors for Daimler Chrysler. The company
says it intends to spend $5 million on renovation, but will maintain the
building’s unique design.